Why Be Moral?
Kai Nielsen (Prometheus: Jul 1, 1989), 300 pages.
Noted philosopher Kai Nielsen offers an answer to this fundamental
question - a question that reaches in to grasp at the very heart of
ethics itself. Essentially, this innocent inquiry masks a confusion
that so many of us get caught in as we think about moral issues. We
fail to realise that there is a difference between judging human
behaviour within an ethical context, or set of moral principles, and
justifying the principles themselves. According to Nielsen, it is
precisely this basic muddle that has spawned all sorts of challenges to
morality, from relativism and institutionism to egoism and
scepticism.Nielsen first argues the case for these challenges in the
strongest possible terms; then he shows that their failure to establish
themselves demonstrates a fundamental flaw - an inability to understand
what it means to have good reasons for the moral claims we make. In his
search for "good reasons" Nielsen must face the innocent question "Why
be moral?" He tries to show us that skirmishes among supporters of
specific moral principles require a different sort of resolution than
those that occur between groups of ethical principles. Justifying an
action within a moral point of view is quite different from making the
case for having a moral point of view in the first place. ~ Product Description
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